Hello All. Here are two excellent articles which appeared in the Asahi Shinbun
last December. As it was the end of the year and people were otherwise preoccupied,
the articles didn't seem to cause much of a stir. So I'll type them in for wider
distribution. Excuse typos. They really are worth the read. Bests, Arudou Debito
in Sapporo

With their dark faces and speech bubbles in katakana, it is easy to recognize that
the cartoon bad guys about to rob a woman leaving a bank are foreigners. The poster,
created by the police and stuck beside an ATM machine in a UFJ bank booth in JR Ueno
Station, is one of many variants on the same beware-of-foreigners theme to be found
throughout Tokyo.

At Asahi Bank near Ueno Park, one of the two ne'er-do-wells conspiring to steal from
a Japanese woman in another cartoon poster has long blonde hair and a big nose.
the female thief's accomplice could pass as a Japanese but, according to an Asahi
bank guard, he too is a foreigner.

Across the road in a Daiwa Securities branch, another poster showsa a blond-haried
cartoon criminal speaking baby Japanese in katakana as he works with a literally
shady brown mustachioed man to relieve a Japanese woman of her cash.

Even the nearby branch of foreign-owned Shinsei Bank has two sets of posters warning
of foreign thieves. "The police asked us to put them up in March," said
a Shinsei official.

The cartoon scenarios are all similar: One foreigner distracts the attention of
a Japanese woman who has just withdrawn cash from an ATM while another steals her
money or cash card. It is a crime of increasing frequency, say police. Ueno police
asked financial establishments to put up posters at 36 locations in the area, and
also briefed bank officials on the threat, said Akihiro Hanamura, deputy superintendent
of Ueno police station, which is reponsible formaking and distributing most of the
posters.

So is Ueno drowning under a tsunami of non-Japanese fraudsters? Not exactly. According
to Hanamura, in the 10 months to the end of October, there were only four cases in
the Ueno area of ATM-related theft--all thought to involve foreigners--and none in
2001. In total, foreigners were responsible for 87 of the 1007 reported Penal Code
violations in his precinct last year.

"Crime by foreigners in Ueno is not a small problem but it is not a big problem
either," he said. "Japanese commit most of the crime."

Evidence of that is at a nearby police box noticeboard, which is plastered with the
faces of about a dozen suspects being sought by the police, all of them Japanese.
Among them are the sinister Harutoshi Zaitsu, a 45-year-old man on the run from
a murder rap; the slightly deranged-loooking Kenichi Hori, 34, sought for an arson
attack; and members of cult Aum Shinrikyo.

But if he most sought-after criminal suspects are Japanese, why do Ueno's anti-crime
posters focus on foreigners?

Hanamura does not have a ready answer, but defends the poster campaign on the grounds
that foreigners commit the ATM scams and not only in Ueno. The Metropoitcan Police
Department recently announced the arrests of 30 Latin Americans in connection with
such crimes. "I assure you have been no complaints about the posters,"
said Hanamura.

But, for different reasons, not everyone is happy with the signs.

"It isn't much use," complains Minoru Kagawa, a 59-year-old office worker,
gesturing to a plain illustration depicting dark-skinned thieves. "The police
should make a poser that can grab the attention. This one here doesn't stand out."

But Kagawa has no quibbles about the content of the advertisement. Japanese need
to be warned because they are not used to such devious crime, he said. "Japan
is a soft touch for foreigners who come here because times are hard back home. The
can lie and steal and get away with it in Japan."

Takuya Ujiie, a 21-year-old part-time social worker, agrees. "Japanese don't
commit this sort of crime," he said. "Maybe foreigners think these posters
are unfair, but I am a Japanese and I think you should have them."

But rights activists, who point to the proliferation of similar prosters in Tokyo
and elsewhere, accuse the police of scaremongering and feeding the idea that foreigners
are criminally prone. "This is not good for our reputation. it makes out that
foreigners are criminals. We know there are some bad foreigners, but not all are
bad," said Imtiaz Chaudhry, secretary-general of United for a Multicultural
Japan, a nonprofit organization based in Noda, Chiba Prefecture. (http://www.tabunka.org)

Activists say the poster campaign--first reported last year when a bank in Nagano
Prefecture put up, and then took down, a poster--began to spread this year. These
signs are "all over Tokyo" and there have been recent sightings in Saitama,
said Jens Wilkinson, a coordinator for The Community, a Web-based activist group
that has lobbied banks to remove the notices and police to stop making them. (http://www.debito.org/TheCommunity)

Critics say the campaign is out of proportion to any threat.

Police logged 107 thefts of the type warned about in the Tokyo metropolitan area
in the 10 months to October, said Hanamura.

Posters distributed by police warning people to keep a tight grip on their purse
when approached by a foreigner merely serve to inject suspicion into everyday interactions
between Japanese and non-Japanese, said another Community member, who declined to
be named.

He said that posters warning about "bad" foreigners were as objectionable
as those simply warning of foreigners.

"You can't tell whether a foreigner is good or bad by looking at them,"
he noted.

OVERSTAYERS SKEW FIGURES

Academics who have studied the foreign crime issue say the hubbub is misplaced considering
the great bulk of crime is committed by Japanese. Of the 325,000 people indicted
last year for Penal Code offenses--which include robbery, assault, murder, and most
other serious crimes--11,893 were non-Japanese, around 3.6 percent.

The figure is high relative to the number of registered foreigners, who make up 1.4
percent [NB 1.7, actually] of the population, but experts say that to get a meaningful
reflection of the scale of the problem, foreign overstayers and estimates of illegal
aliens should also be included in the population tally.

Still, the topic makes delightful press and not just in the sensational weekly magazines.
A study by Nara University associate professor of sociology Ryogo Mabuchi of the
Asahi Shinbun morning and evening editions for the first half of 1998 found that
crimes by foreigners were 4.87 times more likely to be covered than crimes by Japanese.

Mabuchi also faults the media for "giving birth to misunderstanding" by
simply reporting statistics on rising foreing crime without analyzing underlying
factors behind the trend such as an overall rise in the population of non-Japanese
residing in the country (see second article in this series in separate email immediately
following).

According to H. Richard Friman, professor of political science at Marquette University
in Wisconson and author of a number of publications related to crime in Japan, scapegoating
foreigers at a crime of economic or social crisis is not unique or new to Japan.
It occurs periodically in Europe, he said, and happened in Japan in the aftermath
of World War II and the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923.

The collapse of the bubble economy--which has weakened the financial clout of Japanese
crime gangs--the Anti-Organized Crime Law of 1992 and competition for turf "between
and within crime syndicates have created an increased willingness among Japanese
crime groups to work out arrangements with foreigners," Friman said.

Such unholy alliances increase the profile of foreign crimjinals and fan fears among
Japnaese. The salso offer "law-and-order" politicians the opportunity
to score political points at the expense of those who do not have the right to vote,
producing "a tendency to emphasize crime by foreigners as the primary criminal
threat," he said.

Among leading politicans, the issue has perhaps been seized upon most enthusiastically
by Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara, who has repeatedly stressed the danger of foreign
crime since he came to office in 1999. Last year, he famously penned an article
for a major daily newspaper in which he referred to a particularly brutal murdar--by
an unknown assailant--as a crime that "reflected the ethnic DNA (of Chinese)."

ARTICLE ONE OF TWO ENDS

Hello All. Here is the second of two excellent articles which appeared in the Asahi
Shinbun last December. More on how statistics on foreign crime are skewed, creating
a media environment where (as the previously emailed article stated), "crimes
by foreigners were 4.87 times more likely to be covered than crimes by Japanese".
In this age of foreigner scapegoating, this information bears a wider audience.
Bests, Arudou Debito in Sapporo

There are, it appears, lies and damn lies, and then there are crime statistics.
While some argue that foreign crime in Japan is lower than the published statistics
suggest, others say it is higher because cases where there are no arrests are usualy
logged simply as the work of Japanese.

"It is safe to assume that foreigners are committing a lot more crimes because
unless you arrest them you never know," said Akihiro Hanamura, deputy superintendent
of Ueno police station.

Hanamura believes, for example, that foreigners were involved in recent incidents
where construction machinery was used to steal cash-filled ATM machines.

But unless foreigners are apprehended, those crimes will not show up as the work
of non-Japanese.

In the other corner, Andrew Finch, a researcher at Britain's University of East Anglia
who spent two years in the late 1990s studying Japanese homicide statistics, says
simply being foreign extends the range of possible crimes and means non-Japanese
may end up over-represented in the data. "By default, you can become a criminal
by not renewing your visa or carrying your (alien registration) card."

Of the 151 foreigners indicted in Hanamura's Ueno precinct last year, 94 were charged
with overstaying their visa or not possessing an alien registration card, crimes
that only foreigners can commit.

Nationwide, almost one-third of the total 20,595 foreigners indicted for Penal Code
and Special Law violations last year with immigration-related offenses.

H. Richard Friman, professor of political science at Marquette University in Wisconsin
and author of a 1996 book called "NarcoDiplomacy," whose theme includes
an investigation of Japan's drug trade, says foreigners in Japan are "disproportionally
arrested" for narcotics and some other offenses.

Citing the case of drug smuggling, Friman says the Japanese authorities "have
been very reluctant to engage in controlled delivery," a method where law enforcement
officials allow drug shimpments into a country and then monitor them to trace domestic
suppliers. As a general rule, Japan follows the least risky option of seizing drugs
as soon as they are discovered, meaning that the narcotics "mules," often
foreigners, are typically the only ones arrested.

Although police do not break down arrests of drug smugglers by nationality, 879 non-Japanese
were charged with narcotics offenses last year, accounting for 5 percent of all reported
drug indictments.

Friman also points out that while crime by foreigners rose sharply in the 1990s,
so too did the population of non-Japanese.

Foreign crime soared 56 percent from 1992 to 2001, when the number totaled 37, 314
incidents, and the number of foreign perpetrators rose by one-third. In the same
period, the population of registered foreign residents jumped 39 percent from 1.28
million to 1.78 milion.

Statistically, the increase in crime among Japanese has been as sharp, rising 57
percent to 2.73 million cases from 1992 to 2001.

And though newspaper editorials continue to rage against foreign crime, police figures
show it has returned to 1995 levels afer falling in three consecutive years to 2001.

Digging deeper beyond the bare statistics has led Ryogo Mabuchi, an associate professor
of sociology at Nara University, to conclude that the combined crime rate for foreigners
possessing an alien registration card and US military personnel is less than half
that of Japanese and the overall crime rate is roughly the same for Japanese and
the entire foreigner population, including overstayers.

In looking at crime figures from 1997 to 2001, Mabuchi tallied the growth in the
overall foreigner population, compere it to the population of Japanese over 15 years
old and exclude so-called Special Law offenses, which include visa infractions.

"The message that the foreigner crime rate is the same as that for Japanese
isn't being told," he said.

Or at least it isn't being told in Japan. While foreign newspapers such as the Los
Angeles Times have interviewed Mabuchi about his survey, the Japanese-language media
have shown no interest.